Reverse Gardening
I've been experimenting with plants in new gardens in a climate that is strange to me. I've had successes but also failures.
We learn from our failures. And here is what I have learned in my Santa Fe garden: Do The Opposite.
Plants that failed me in my old garden are successes here, like coreopsis. I could not grow any variety of hybrid tickseed at all in Connecticut and after many tries I finally stayed away from ever planting them. And now . . . well.
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Threadleaf Coreopsis 'Curry Up' and 'Hot Paprika' |
Crystal white frilly Physostegia (Obedient plants) are sold here as easy for this climate, but because they did so well for me in my old garden, the reverse happened: they failed here in a miserable way.
And robust St. Johnswort was a beauty for me before but struggles here despite being a good plant for alkaline soil and dry shade. Not here, not for me now.
But I could not grow speedwell before, and here the stiff upright purple candles of Veronica are thriving along with Blackeyed Susan 'Goldsturm' which I gave up on back east when it got black foliage. It does much better for me here.
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Upright purple spikes are Veronica 'Royal Candles' with 'Goldsturm' blackeyed Susan and orange zinnias |
It's not just that my former garden was in a wet climate and it's dry here; that's a key difference I am adjusting for. I can grow lavender here but not back east, and the hydrangeas I had in Connecticut aren't going to grow here, I know that. Those adjustments are easy.
It's the familiar plants I knew that are supposed to be adapted to conditions in the dry mountain west and that grow in diverse places that I want to experiment with. But if those plants worked for me once, they don't now and the ones I gave up on back east are easy here. It's all reversed.
So when I am at the nursery and see a familiar plant, I have to go through mental checklists:
Did I grow it before? Yes
Did it do well? It thrived
Did I like it - was it pretty or elegant? A stunner in my old garden
Should I buy it for my Santa Fe garden? No.
or
Did I try to grow this before? Yes
Did I kill it? Multiple times over and over
Was it my fault? Probably
Should I buy it for my Santa Fe garden? Yes, get three.
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